Conservative Lead in U.S. Ideology Is Down to Single Digits

Story Highlights

Self-identified conservatives led liberals by nine percentage points in 2017

First time in Gallup trend that conservative edge is less than 10 points

Half of Democrats identify as liberal for first time

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Continuing a quarter-century trend, the term "liberal" continues to catch up with "conservative" as Americans' preferred description of their political views. Thirty-five percent of U.S. adults in 2017 identified as conservative and 26% as liberal, the first time the conservative label's edge has been single digits. Its nine-percentage-point edge in 2017 is down from 11 points in 2016 and roughly 20-point advantages at times in the past.

Longer term, the percentage of U.S. adults identifying as liberal has climbed from 17% the first year Gallup used this measure in 1992 to 26% in 2017, while the percentage calling themselves moderate has fallen from 43% to 35%. Conservatives' share of the political pie was about the same in 2017 (35%) as in 1992 (36%), although it rose to 40% several times in between. The residual group, generally 4% to 5% in recent years, is unable, or refuses, to classify themselves with one of the three terms.

There have been some interruptions in the rise of liberalism, most notably a period of stability (at 19%) from 1997 to 2000, and some slight reversals at the start of Barack Obama's presidency. But the long-term pattern is one of a growing proportion of liberals, offset mainly by fewer moderates.

These findings are based on annual averages of Gallup's multiday, nontracking surveys. The 2017 aggregate includes 13 different surveys conducted between January and December, totaling 12,766 national adults.

Leftward Shift Mainly Attributable to Democrats

Almost all of the shift since 2001 toward the liberal label is the result of Democrats increasingly adopting the term. As a result, the Democratic Party has moved from a fairly mixed party ideologically at the start of the century to one that is now decidedly left-leaning.

In 2001, nearly as many Democrats identified as conservative (25%) as liberal (30%), while the largest segment, 44%, were moderate. Since then, the percentage of Democrats identifying as liberal has risen by about a point a year, reaching 50% this year for the first time.

Meanwhile, fewer and fewer Democrats have identified as moderate or conservative.

GOP Remains a Mainly Conservative Party

The Republican Party has undergone far less ideological change over the past 17 years, with the vast majority of its supporters consistently seeing themselves as conservative and most of the rest identifying as moderate. No more than 6% have called themselves liberal across the entire 2001 to 2017 period.

The only change in Republicans' ideology has been at the margins, including a seven-point increase since 2001 in the percentage identifying as conservative. There has been a corresponding decline since 2001 in the percentage identifying as moderate -- now 25%, down from 31%.

Independents' ideological views have varied over the past 17 years, but after a slight increase in conservatism from 2009 to 2013, their ideological profile has returned to what it was in 2001.

The largest segment of independents -- 43% in 2017 -- has consistently been moderate, while slightly more have identified as conservative than liberal.

Stark Ideological Differences Seen by Gender, Age, Education and Region

As shown in the accompanying table of 2017 results, Gallup also sees differences in Americans' ideological views among demographic groups. The greatest of these are by age and education, as older and less-educated adults tend to be conservative, while younger and more highly educated adults tend to be liberal.

There is also a sizable spread by gender, although neither group tilted liberal in 2017. Men showed a 16-point preference for the conservative label, while women were closely split between conservative and liberal.

Americans' Political Ideology, by Subgroup, in 2017

Conservative

Moderate

Liberal

% Conservative minus % Liberal

%

%

%

pct. pts.

Gender

Men

38

36

22

+16

Women

31

34

30

+1

Age

18 to 29

23

40

32

-9

30 to 49

32

36

29

+3

50 to 64

40

35

21

+19

65+

45

29

23

+22

Education

High school or less

39

34

22

+17

Some college

36

36

24

+12

College graduate

32

36

30

+2

Postgraduate

25

35

38

-13

Region

East

29

35

32

-3

Midwest

36

36

24

+12

South

40

35

20

+20

West

32

34

30

+2

Party ID

Republicans

69

25

5

+64

Independents

29

43

24

+5

Democrats

13

35

50

-37

2017 averages

Gallup

Ideology also differs significantly by U.S. region, generally conforming with traditional red-/blue-state voting patterns. Residents of the East are more likely to be liberal than conservative by a three-point margin, whereas residents of the Midwest and South lean conservative by double-digit margins. Residents of the West are closely split.

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Bottom Line

For many years, liberals were a small minority in the U.S., but their numbers have gradually increased to within single digits of conservatives. However, rather than being a broad societal trend, this mainly reflects a shift among Democrats, who are now on the cusp of being a majority-liberal party. Meanwhile, Republicans have become an even more conservative party, underscoring the increased polarization of the country occurring on a broad swath of issues. Independents remain more evenly split, albeit a bit more moderate than the country as a whole.

The increased use of "liberal" to define one's politics may partly be a matter of semantics if, for instance, the term is simply becoming more acceptable, particularly among Democrats. But it also coincides with expanded Democratic support for immigration and stricter gun laws, greater worry about global warming, and diminished support for the death penalty -- all issues on which Republicans' views haven't changed or have grown more conservative. At the same, both groups have grown more accepting of gay marriage and legalizing marijuana, but on balance, liberals have moved to the left on far more issues than Republicans. In other words, Democrats' closer attachment to the liberal label may simply reflect the reality that their views are more liberal.

Survey Methods

Results are based on aggregated telephone interviews from 13 separate Gallup polls conducted in 2017, with a random sample of 12,766 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. Trend results are based on annual aggregates encompassing thousands of interviews each year.

For results based on the total sample of national adults, the margin of sampling error is ±1 percentage point at the 95% confidence level. All reported margins of sampling error include computed design effects for weighting.

Each 2017 sample of national adults includes a minimum quota of 70% cellphone respondents and 30% landline respondents, with additional minimum quotas by time zone within region. Landline and cellular telephone numbers are selected using random-digit-dial methods.

Democrats have become increasingly likely to describe their economic views as liberal. Republicans' economic conservatism has waned a bit since the early Barack Obama years but is stronger than during the George W. Bush era.